Three Ways Businesses Are Using Payment Links to Keep Payments Secure and Simple

Three Ways Businesses Are Using Payment Links to Keep Payments Secure and Simple

In the service industry, taking payment hasn't always been as straightforward as tapping a card. Now it is, thanks to Payment Links, a handy feature available with Zeller Virtual Terminal. As a service provider, you deal with instalments, deposits, prepayments, higher transaction values, and ultimately, customers who aren't present when it comes time to pay. Traditionally, this has meant chasing up invoices or making repeated phone calls to accept a payment. Nowadays, technology is affording a much smoother payment experience for these types of transactions. With Zeller Virtual Terminal , businesses can accept card payments by sending their customers a secure payment link , which lets them enter their card details in their own time. It's simple, secure, and fast, and businesses from all industries are adopting it. Below, we explain three of the most common uses for Payment Links and why they’re a handy solution to have in your back pocket to help keep your cash flow healthy, and your customers happy. What is a Payment Link? Payment Links are a payment solution available on Zeller Virtual Terminal, a web-based tool that lets you process payments without the need for a physical EFTPOS machine . It enables businesses to generate a secure payment link and send it to their customer, who can then enter their card details in their own time. You can create and send a payment link from Zeller Dashboard , or straight from your phone with Zeller App — handy if you're on the road, on-site with a customer, or away from your desk. Either way, simply navigate to Virtual Terminal (or Payment Link in the app) and choose how to send it: Send Payment Link via Email, Send Payment Link via SMS, or Copy Link. Choosing the latter means you can share the link on whatever platform is most convenient for your customer, be it WhatsApp, iMessage, or Facebook Messenger. The link directs customers to Zeller's secure payment page, where they can enter their card details and proceed with the payment. Every transaction is protected by 3D Secure (3DS), an added identity check that may prompt your customer's bank to verify the payment — either by authorising it instantly or by sending a one-time code for the customer to enter. This extra step helps reduce fraud and unauthorised payments , giving both you and your customer confidence that the transaction is legitimate. Once the payment has been processed, customers have the option to download a copy of their receipt. What are the most common uses of Payment Links? 1. For high-value transactions Whether you're selling kitchens, cars, or wedding dresses, you'll know how important the customer experience is in the transaction process. When a customer is about to hand over a large sum of money, they need to be given the white-glove treatment. And when your business relies on fewer but higher-value transactions, those payments need to be made promptly and securely to keep your cash flow healthy. For these reasons, Zeller's Payment Links are a great solution. On the customer side, it offers convenience and peace of mind, knowing that their card details are shared securely and privately, with the added benefit of being able to pay with American Express — particularly advantageous for high-value purchases. For you as a business owner, it keeps fees low while keeping you protected. With Zeller Virtual Terminal, the transaction fee (1.75% + 25c) can be passed on to the customer through surcharging, and your business also benefits from a dedicated anti-fraud team, 24/7 transaction monitoring, and 3D Secure protection on every Payment Link transaction. When you're dealing with high-value transactions and can't always verify that the customer is who they say they are, that extra layer of bank-side identity verification is especially valuable in helping you avoid falling victim to credit card fraud. 2. For deposits, pre-orders, and pre-bookings No matter what kind of business you run, there's likely to come a time when you'll need to take a deposit or secure a service or item for your customer with a pre-order or pre-payment. Restaurants do it for large group bookings, hotels do it to reserve event spaces or accommodate special catering requests, and retailers do it to guarantee the sale of high-value or custom-made items. In these situations, Payment Links don’t just help you get paid fast — they also make the reconciliation process much easier. When you create your payment link with Zeller Virtual Terminal, you can enter all the relevant details about the transaction in the notes section, such as the pick-up date, the job number, whether it's one instalment of many, or the name of the person handling the sale. If your business has a number of different departments — a hotel might have the front office, the pool bar, the corporate space, the rooftop, and the massage room, for example — you can create a different Site for each, and quickly assign each Payment Link transaction to the relevant one. Being able to create links from Zeller App also means staff can take a deposit on the spot, wherever they are on-site, rather than waiting until they're back at a computer. When it comes time to reconcile your sales at the end of the month, payments can easily be filtered in Zeller Dashboard by site, date, status (approved, declined, or refunded), transaction value, and reference number. 3. For gift vouchers Many businesses don't have a formalised process for selling gift vouchers, and yet it's important not to deny customers this option if they specifically ask for one. Generating a payment link is an ultra-simple, quick, and professional way to accept gift voucher payments. Simply generate a payment link with Zeller Virtual Terminal, send it to your customer, and ask them to download a receipt once their payment has been processed. This receipt will contain a unique reference number. Write the reference number down on a gift certificate, or ask your customer to pass it on to the gift recipient. When the recipient comes to redeem their voucher, your staff simply need to search that reference number in Zeller to bring up the associated transaction and add a transaction note to indicate that the voucher has been redeemed.

by Team Zeller
No Reservation Logo

In partnership with

American Express

Master hospitality with our 6-part series

The founders behind six of Australia's most respected venues take you behind the scenes, and into their kitchens, to share their hard-earned lessons, advice, and insights, so you can run your venue, with no reservations.

Watch the series
No Reservations hero image
first episode thumbnail

Turning a Profit

With Alejandro Saravia, Renascence Group

Watch now

No Reservations

second episode thumbnail

Building a Brand

With Guy Greenstone and Justin Joiner, Stomping Ground

Watch now

No Reservations

Subscribe to the Zeller Business Blog

Stay connected with Zeller to receive curated news and content designed for small business owners, delivered to your inbox.

Best Business Bank Account

Latest Reports

Special Report
Zeller Invoicing Report 2025

Zeller Invoicing Report 2025

Paper and PDF invoices persist – but why? Australians have long embraced the speed, accountability, security, and transparency that electronic payments offer, with card payments making up 76 per cent of all transactions . In striking contrast, a recent report estimated that around 90% of SMEs are still sending paper-based or PDF invoices. With digital payments so deeply entrenched, why are Aussie SMEs still sending invoices that force their customers into the arduous process of opening a banking app and copy‑pasting BSBs and account numbers? It’s a fair question – especially when online invoicing solutions are far more time-efficient and result in much faster payment. How much faster, you ask? The numbers below tell a clear story. 100,000+ invoices. Four key insights. Zeller recently analysed more than 100,000 invoices sent and paid via Zeller Invoices. The data clearly demonstrates that online invoicing not only accelerates payments but also reveals important insights around industries, payment methods, delivery channels, and payment terms. This report dives into these insights, providing a guidebook for how you can  immediately improve your business cash flow. Insight 1 Invoice payment times vary across industries. When it comes to invoice payment speed, not all industries are created equal. Zeller’s data shows that on average, invoices are paid in 7.14 days, regardless of sector. Industries such as Retail, Leisure & Entertainment, Transport, and Hospitality tend to be the slowest – on average taking longer than a week for invoices to be paid. In contrast, sectors like Travel, Health & Fitness, Professional Services, and Beauty benefit from faster invoice payments, below the 7-day Australian average. Why the difference? Payment delays can depend on industry norms and client expectations. For example, retail suppliers often wait on store owners to reconcile accounts, whereas a beauty therapist or consultant may be paid immediately after the appointment. Knowing where your industry stands helps set your expectations and plan your cash flow. If you operate in a typically slow-paying sector, it’s wise to be proactive about speeding up payments (as we’ll explore in the following sections). And if you’re in a faster-paying field, there may still be room to tighten the turnaround and get paid even sooner. Practical tips Insight 2 Invoices payable by card are paid 7 times faster. One of the report’s most striking findings is the impact on payment timing by the payment methods available to  settle an invoice. Invoices that offer customers an online credit card payment option get paid dramatically faster – on average 7 times faster than invoices that only offer payment via manual bank transfer. In fact, when customers can click a secure link and pay by card, invoices are settled in just about 2.4 days on average, versus 14.5 days when only a bank transfer is offered.   This trend holds across every sector, though the degree varies. For example, in the Beauty industry, card payments got invoices paid a whopping 15 times faster, versus about 3 times faster in Retail (which is still a huge improvement). Travel businesses saw 9x faster payments with card, Food & Drink about 8.4x, and even traditionally slower sectors like Transport saw over 4x improvement. The bottom line is that, no matter your field, offering customers the choice to pay invoices by credit or debit card greatly accelerates your cash flow. Why does card payment make such a difference? It comes down to convenience and immediacy. Paying an invoice by card is frictionless for the customer – it’s just a few clicks with no need to open a banking app or remember a BSB and account number. Customers can even pay on credit (which means they don’t need cash on hand at that moment) and can potentially earn reward points for doing so. The process is faster and all in one place, especially with digital wallets like Apple Pay or Google Pay allowing for one-tap checkouts. In contrast, bank transfers introduce more steps and greater friction (opening a separate app, typing out amounts and references, ensuring funds are available), which means invoices tend to sit unpaid longer. The data illustrates this clearly. When an invoice includes a card payment link, 70% of those invoices are paid within 24 hours of being sent. With bank-transfer-only invoices, however, a mere 28% are paid on the same day – and nearly 40% of these invoices remain unpaid for over a week. That gap can be the difference between having money in your account tomorrow versus chasing customers next month. Enabling instant online payments essentially turns invoices into a quick “checkout” experience for your client, dramatically improving the odds of prompt payment. Practical tips Insight 3 Invoices sent via SMS are paid 43% faster than those issued via email. How you deliver an invoice can be almost as important as the options you provide to customers for them to make invoice payment. The data reveals that sending invoices by SMS leads to significantly faster payments than sending them by email. In fact, an invoice sent as an SMS link is paid 43% faster on average than an invoice sent via email. In other words, getting that bill directly into your customer’s phone via text message can shave substantial time off the payment turnaround. This makes sense when you consider customer behaviour. A text message is typically read within seconds, and it pops up right in front of the client – it’s hard to ignore. By contrast, an emailed invoice might sit unseen in an inbox or be deferred until “later” when the customer is at their desk. Worse, emails can get lost in spam or filtered out, meaning your client might not even see the invoice at all. With SMS, you’re putting the payment link literally in your client’s hand, on the device they check most often. It’s the most visible way to get their attention on a bill. Another important factor is mobile optimisation. If you send a text with a payment link, you can almost bet the customer will click it on their smartphone – so that invoice needs to be easy to read and pay on a small screen. A clunky or non-mobile-friendly payment page can create friction and delay payment. On the other hand, a smooth mobile checkout (think big buttons, simple form, autofilled details) encourages customers to settle the invoice immediately, perhaps even on the spot while they’re thinking about it. Zeller Invoices automatically recognises which device is being used to, meaning it works flawlessly on both mobile desktop. Timing is another factor here. The sooner the customer receives the invoice, the sooner you’re likely to get paid. Our data suggests a strong benefit to issuing the invoice as soon as a job is done or a sale is completed, rather than waiting hours or days. For instance, if you finish a service call or deliver goods, sending the invoice before you leave the client’s location can prompt immediate payment (often customers will pay while you’re still there). Prompt invoicing keeps the transaction fresh in the client’s mind and signals professionalism. Practical tips Insight 4 Longer terms don’t necessarily mean slower payment. It’s common for businesses to offer extended payment terms – such as 30 or 60 days – to valued clients or to entice new business. Intuitively, you might think giving a client two months to pay would result in getting paid closer to that 60-day deadline. Surprisingly, Zeller’s data shows that extending payment terms doesn’t significantly delay when customers actually pay. In other words, a client given 60 days isn’t guaranteed to take 60 days to pay – they often pay much sooner. In fact, invoices with 30-day terms were paid on average in about 15 days, whereas invoices with 60-day terms were paid in under 20 days on average.  What does this mean for you? First, offering extremely long terms (beyond 30 days) may not be necessary in many cases, since clients aren’t likely to fully utilise that extra time. If a customer is going to pay you in about two to three weeks regardless, then giving them two months to pay is more of a courtesy than a requirement, and it could unnecessarily strain your cash flow. Remember that when you extend long payment terms, you’re effectively extending credit to your customer and financing their operations in the meantime. That can leave you footing the bill for expenses (like goods sold or staff wages) while you wait for the money to come in. Secondly, the fact that longer terms don’t necessarily mean later payments presents an opportunity – you might be able to negotiate shorter terms without upsetting customers, especially if you’ve noticed they typically pay early anyway. For instance, if a client consistently pays your 30-day invoice in two weeks, that’s a signal that you could propose a 14-day term moving forward, formalising what’s already happening in practice. This protects your cash flow with minimal impact on the customer, who has shown they don’t really need the extra time anyway. Of course, some clients will still push right up to the deadline (and a few will be late payers regardless of terms). The key is to know your customers. Use your invoicing data or reports to identify who pays when. You might find some always pay early (or on time), while others chronically drag their feet. You can then manage each accordingly. Perhaps rewarding prompt payers with a small discount for early payment, or enforcing late fees for stragglers, as appropriate. Practical tips